She-wolf returns to Eden Park, with old and new paws

Whoever stole the famed she-wolf from a statue in Eden Park left behind the more famous twins – Romulus and Remus of Roman myth.
Whoever stole the famed she-wolf from a statue in Eden Park left behind the more famous twins – Romulus and Remus of Roman myth.

A beloved piece of public art. A middle-of-the-night theft. Bereft local supporters. An unsolved crime.

And now, grateful public officials.

What was lost is now found, as Cincinnati Parks officials on Friday welcome the she-wolf back to her Eden Park home.

On Sept. 20, 1931, local Sons of Italy members, meeting for a convention, accepted a replica of Rome’s famed Capitoline Wolf during a ceremony at Eden Park. They repeated the event the following year, on June 12, swapping a wrongly delivered version for a larger one.

The mama wolf, with the even more famous twin infants Romulus and Remus nursing under her belly, remained on quiet watch over the Ohio River for the next 90 years.

She rarely drew attention over the decades, save the case in 2020, when former Cincinnati City Council member Chris Seelbach suggested her removal because of her loose ties to the regime of Italian dictator Benito Mussolini. (Faced with pushback, he quickly dropped the idea.)

But in her 90th birthday month, the she-wolf became a sensation. On the night of June 16, 2022, the bronze statue was stolen − snipped off at the ankles, her granite and marble base left with just the twins, mouths agape, and four paws.

The theft of Cincinnati’s Capitoline Wolf may not equal art heists of the past – “Mona Lisa” snatched in 1911, European collections gutted during World War II, “The Scream” ripped off its wall in 2004 – but it drew widespread attention.

City officials called the theft “tragic” and “beyond disappointing,” saying they’d been “overwhelmed with calls and messages from frustrated citizens” who wanted the she-wolf replaced.

Their efforts will be celebrated during Friday’s dedication of the she-wolf replacement.

Twins live on in Roman myth

The thief or thieves may have wanted the wolf, at 37 inches high and 52 inches long, for scrap metal, park officials said originally. That speculation was never confirmed, the crime was never solved and the wolf was never found, they now say.

Whoever took the wolf left behind the more famous characters in the Capitoline Wolf story.

According to Roman mythology, Romulus and Remus were left to die on the banks of the River Tiber, banished by a jealous king.

An unnamed she-wolf helped save the twins, nursing them in her cave. Then adopted by a shepherd, they later learned the jealous king was a great-uncle who’d stolen the throne from their grandfather.

Once informed, they helped restore their grandfather to power and set out to build a city of their own. Along the way, Romulus either killed or plotted the death of his brother – and went on to create Rome by himself.

The origin story has many versions but nonetheless inspired the original Capitoline Wolf statue and more than 80 replicas in the centuries since then.

The first she-wolf has been housed in the Capitoline Museums in Rome since 1471.

Eleven are installed in the United States. Besides Cincinnati, they are located in Chicago; Boston; Cleveland; Washington, D.C.; New York City; Del Rio, Texas; Sault Ste. Marie, Michigan; Tulsa, Oklahoma; plus Rome, New York, and Rome, Georgia.

The new she-wolf was designed using a plaster version found in a Florence, Italy, museum, and believed to be identical to the one stolen from Cincinnati's Eden Park in June 2022.
The new she-wolf was designed using a plaster version found in a Florence, Italy, museum, and believed to be identical to the one stolen from Cincinnati's Eden Park in June 2022.

New she-wolf includes old paws

When current members of what is now Lodge 1191 of the Sons and Daughters of Italy learned their beloved she-wolf had gone missing, they wanted another one.

In cooperation with Cincinnati Parks and the Cincinnati Parks Foundation and with help from a local sculptor, they soon discovered an identical plaster version of Cincinnati’s she-wolf in a museum in Florence, Italy. That was used to design the replacement.

Just two months after the theft, lodge trustee Mike Camacci delivered a paw from the stolen she-wolf to Italy. Artists there used the paw to replicate the scale and bronze tone of the replacement.

Cincinnati Parks new sign tells the story of Eden Park's Capitoline Wolf, its 2022 theft and its 2023 replacement.
Cincinnati Parks new sign tells the story of Eden Park's Capitoline Wolf, its 2022 theft and its 2023 replacement.

Parks officials sent the base, with its remaining paws, to Florence “to reunite the twins with the she-wolf who raised them,” a new sign at the site explains.

The bronze of the new she-wolf – now installed, covered and awaiting her Friday debut – includes the melted-down paws of the original.

Sons and Daughters of Italy helped raise the $55,000 needed for the project. Known for their annual ravioli dinner, part of their contribution came from ravioli sales.

The new she-wolf arrived, crated, in Cincinnati in October, awaiting her Friday unveiling in Mount Adam's Eden Park.
The new she-wolf arrived, crated, in Cincinnati in October, awaiting her Friday unveiling in Mount Adam's Eden Park.

'Measures taken' to keep new wolf safe

Now 100 years old, Lodge 1101 of the Sons and Daughters of Italy will be represented at Friday’s dedication by its president, Joe Mastruserio.

With their help, “the Italian Americans’ authentic appreciation and love for the city of Cincinnati was reaffirmed,” the new on-site sign says.

Parks Director Jason Barron will lead the event, with other parks and city officials expected to attend.

Parks made the she-wolf’s home more visible by clearing out some brush near its Twin Lakes home, parks spokesman Rocky Merz said Thursday.

“Other measures have been taken to secure the statue. However, we are not talking about them publicly for obvious reasons,” Merz said.

The dedication ceremony starts at 10 a.m., at Eden Park Drive and Lake Drive.

This article originally appeared on Cincinnati Enquirer: Eden Park she-wolf statue is back

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